Sanatorium Park

Sanatorium Park (Welsh: Parc Sanatorium) is a public park in the Leckwith district of western Cardiff, Wales. It includes open green space, wildflower hedgerows, two play areas, and a football goal with a half basketball court.

Sanatorium Park includes open areas that are used for exercise

Description

The entrances to the park are from Treganna Street and Lawrenny Avenue,[1] and from the Ely Trail footpath that runs through the park.[2] The River Ely runs along the western side of the park; Trelai Park (the site of former Ely Racecourse) is on the other side of the river, but there is no pedestrian bridge between the parks. The Grangetown Viaduct carries the A4232 road over the southern edge of the park.

Lansdowne Hospital was located to the northeast of the park; the buildings have been demolished and the site is now used for housing.[3]

Sanatorium Park at sunrise in June 2020

Sanatorium Park adjoins of the site of the former Ely Paper Works, latterly known as the Arjo Wiggins Teape Paper Mill, which opened in 1865 and closed in 2000. Samuel Evans and Thomas Owen took over the works in 1877, and by 1889 the works was producing between 145 and 150 tons of paper per week.[4] After the works closed, the site was cleared in preparation for redevelopment. Work started on a new housing development of the 53-hectare site in 2015, named The Mill.[5]

Canton Brickworks adjoined the park and was situated at the end of Sanitorium Road. It is shown on the 1898 OS map to 1838, but by 1947 it had been demolished.[6]

Controversy

Protest sign, June 2020

In April 2020 Cardiff City Council started construction of a football pitch in the east of the park, near to the children's play area; the pitch was to be enclosed in a 3-metre (10 ft) high fence. There was opposition from local residents who had been unaware of the plans, and in May 2020 work was suspended pending further consultation.[7]

In early June 2020 residents were informed that work was about to be resume. The pitch was now to be in a different area of the park, and the work would have restricted access to areas of the park which was then being extensively used due to the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions then in force. The resumption of work was strongly opposed by local residents some of whom obstructed the construction workers. The renewed protests resulted in the council suspending work for a second time.[8]

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References

  1. Internet Publishing Team. "Living". ishare.cardiff.gov.uk. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  2. "Ely Trail". Outdoor Cardiff. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  3. ST17NE - A (includes: Cardiff; Lecwith; Llanedern; Whitchurch) (Map). 10,560. Ordnance Survey. 1965.
  4. "Ely Paper Mills; Ely Paper Works, Ely, Cardiff". Coflein. Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. Retrieved 2020-06-14.
  5. Kelsey, Chris (2015-12-17). "Work starts on transforming Ely paper mill site into 800-home 'urban village'". walesonline. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
  6. "The Brickworks of Wales - South Glamorgan". www.industrialgwent.co.uk. Retrieved 2020-06-14.
  7. Clements, Laura (2020-06-08). "Fury over plan to redevelop open green space for fenced-off pitch". Wales Online. Retrieved 2020-06-15.
  8. Clements, Laura (2020-06-11). "Woman stops diggers turning Cardiff parkland into fenced-off pitch". Wales Online. Retrieved 2020-06-15.

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